|
Gold, silver and crude oil prices are closely
related to the movement of the U.S. dollar. After a healthy consolidation,
gold began to move up in August 2012. At the same time, deteriorating
expectations for crop yields in the American Midwest moved corn and soybean
prices to new highs. Higher food prices in late 2012 or early 2013 could have
far reaching and geopolitically destabilizing effects likely to weigh on
stocks, putting the shine back on precious metals. While billionaires George Soros and John
Paulson are buying gold, silver has been in backwardation
in recent weeks and silver held in ETFs rose to $16.2
billion according to Bloomberg.
While increasing risk of geopolitical instability,
including fear of a U.S. or Israeli war with Iran, account for rising crude
oil prices and renewed interest in precious metals, the proverbial elephant
in the room remains the U.S. dollar vis-à-vis a crumbling Euro.
Precious metals mining stocks hit a low in mid May
when the U.S. Dollar Index (USDX) shot up +5.5% (4.33 points) from 78.71 on
April 27 to 83.04 on May 31. By July 24 the USDX had made a 2-year high of
84.10 as Spanish bond yields soared against a backdrop of continued worries
over the European debt crisis. The U.S. dollar then slid -2.25% (1.89 points)
to 82.21 on August 2, bouncing back to 82.60 by August 17 with a flat 50-day
moving average as precious metals prices and mining stocks rose.
Gold mining stocks, in particular, have suffered due
to higher costs related to higher energy prices and lower ore grades, which
have compressed cash margins and pushed out returns on capital investments.
Gold demand, however, has not abated and higher production costs effectively
put a floor under the price of gold.
The key international measure of the U.S.
dollar’s value is the price of crude oil. Recessions, depressions and
economic slowdowns in the U.S., U.K., Europe, China and Japan have softened
demand for crude oil, moderating crude oil prices and making the U.S. dollar
stronger than it would have been otherwise.
Weaker fuel consumption in the U.S. has been offset
by steady global demand and fears of war in the Middle East which could
disrupt oil shipments through the Strait of Hormuz in the Persian Gulf.
Although crude oil prices could moderate in the near
term if tensions in the Middle East are resolved, it is more likely that the
region will become more chaotic due to higher food prices in late 2012 or
early 2013. Further, it is far more likely that conflict between the U.S. or
Israel and Iran will escalate. In the long term, oil prices will rise due to growing global demand and higher production
costs, i.e., for heavy sour crude, shale oil, etc.
Weak U.S. Dollar Fundamentals
The U.S. dollar is fundamentally weaker than it
appears to be based on the USDX. Economic growth in the U.S. is extremely
weak, despite massive government deficit spending. U.S. federal government debt of
roughly $16 trillion, chronic budget deficits of more
than $1 trillion per year and unfunded liabilities of more than
$62.3 trillion are unsustainable compared to the U.S. Gross Domestic Product (GDP) of
$15.29 trillion (2011 est.), which includes government deficit
spending. On a Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (GAAP) basis, which
accounts for unfunded liabilities, the U.S. federal deficit would be
approximately $5 trillion. The U.S. debt to GDP ratio is
approximately 100%, which is worse than that of Spain. Further, the U.S.
remains embroiled in foreign wars and continues to
prosecute a global “War on Terror” at a total combined cost of
several trillion dollars to date.
The Federal Reserve has purchased a large portion of
U.S. Treasury bonds since 2008, making the demand for U.S. debt appear
stronger than it would have otherwise and artificially suppressing treasury
bond yields. The Federal Reserve’s asset purchases (buying toxic
mortgage backed securities, quantitative easing I and II and “operation
twist”, etc.) represent “money printing”. Money printing
weakens the currency and causes prices to rise, which punishes savers,
workers and consumers in general. The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics’
Consumer Price Index (CPI) has shown little change but pre-1980 measures of
inflation are as high as 9%.
U.S. domestic price inflation is evident to
consumers in terms of food and energy prices, if not in the CPI. The rising
cost of living in the U.S. must be contrasted with declining real income and
high unemployment. Unemployment in the U.S. indicates a long-term, structural
decline in the U.S. job market. Specifically, the civilian population
employment ratio has declined for more than a decade.
By all rights, the U.S. dollar should be far weaker,
but, to quote Sir Winston Churchill, “the dollar is the worst currency,
except for all the alternatives.” The USDX is a weighted geometric mean
of the U.S. dollar’s value compared with the euro (57.6% weight), the
Japanese yen (13.6% weight), the British Pound sterling (11.9% weight), the
Canadian dollar (9.1% weight), the Swedish krona (4.2% weight) and the Swiss
franc (3.6% weight).
- Euro (EUR) – The saga of European
sovereign debt, the threat of default, austerity versus economic growth,
rating cuts, last minute rescues and civil unrest continues unabated.
The Euro is, in fact, extremely weak which makes the U.S. dollar appear
unnaturally strong. The European Central Bank (ECB) has little choice
but to create more Euros to bail out the system.
- Yen (JPY) – Japan’s recession
after a tragic series of economic shocks, i.e., the 2011 tsunami and
Fukushima nuclear disaster resulted in an inflow of yen back into Japan,
increasing demand in the foreign exchange market. The strengthening yen
necessitated massive interventions by central banks to weaken the currency
in order to stabilize trade.
- Pound sterling (GBP) – The U.K. is
mired in a deep recession and the Bank of England is engaged in a series
of monetary injections that have weakened the pound. There is no visible
light at the end of the tunnel.
- Canadian dollar (CAD) – Because
Canada’s economy is intertwined with that of the U.S., the
Canadian dollar has remained more or less at parity with the U.S.
dollar, although it has historically been the weaker of the two.
- Krona (SEK) – Sweden’s
economy depends on exports and her largest trading partners are in the
European Monetary Union, e.g., Germany, Finland, France, Netherlands and
Belgium. If the krona appreciates, Swedish exports will fall.
- Swiss franc (CHF) – The Swiss
National Bank has pegged the Swiss franc to the Euro depriving investors
of a traditional safe haven.
The Most Favored Nation
China is struggling to maintain its exports and GDP
growth in the face of economic deceleration while battling inflation and the
fallout of regional real estate bubbles. The Renminbi
(RMB) is closely linked to the U.S. dollar and is managed downward by the
People’s Bank of China (PBoC) in order to
support Chinese exports.
Due to the relative weakness of other currencies
(mainly the EUR, GBP and RMB), the U.S. dollar’s recent strength is
illusory. While a weaker U.S. dollar would aid U.S. exports and reduce the
U.S trade deficit, high inflation would also punish savers, workers and
consumers in general. A solution to the European sovereign debt crisis, a
larger and longer term refinancing plan by the ECB, or signs of economic
recovery in the Eurozone, would send the U.S. dollar down sharply.
Additionally, strong growth in the BRIC countries or an economic recovery in
China would greatly increase upward pressure on global commodity prices.
Conversely, a continued slowdown in China, which is more likely, will reduce
demand for base metals which is bullish for silver because most silver is
produced as a byproduct of base metals mining.
Platinum group metals (PGM) could fall as a function
of weaker automobile demand if the Chinese economy continues to slow but Chinese automobile sales are up
22.6% year over year. Weaker automotive demand could be
offset by safe haven investment demand for platinum and, in the short term,
PGM prices are rising sharply due to ongoing mine labor problems in South
Africa.
China, together with the other BRIC countries
(Brazil, Russia, India and China), South Africa and Iran, is slowly but
systematically preparing to move away from the U.S. dollar. At some point,
the currently gradual movement of global trade away from the U.S. dollar will
reach a critical mass and accelerate. The loss of its world reserve currency
status is an existential threat to the U.S. dollar. For the time being,
however, it is not in the interest of any of the major players, i.e., China,
to dump the U.S. dollar. Despite poor economic conditions in the U.S., U.S.
consumers are more addicted than ever to cheap imports from China.
China is a major producer and
importer of gold and Chinese companies are aggressively buying crude oil and
natural resources around the world but, according
to the PBoC, Chinese currency reserves grew
1.9% to $3.24 trillion as of June.
The PBoC and other central banks purchased 400 tonnes of gold in the 12 months ended March 31, 2012
compared with 156 tonnes during the same period in
2011, according to the World Gold Council.
Gold, Silver,
Crude Oil
Given the weak fundamentals of the U.S. dollar and
the fact that its weakness has been masked by a variety of factors, prices
could increase too quickly for policy makers, i.e., Federal Reserve Chairman
Ben Bernanke, to respond. The U.S. dollar is vulnerable in the face of
potential Eurozone stabilization, stronger than expected demand from BRIC
countries, or geopolitical disintegration linked to higher food prices.
Additionally, further intervention by the Federal Reserve could send the U.S.
dollar sharply downward and cause a disruptive spike in global commodity
prices. Pressure on the Federal Reserve to engage in further monetary easing,
e.g., quantitative easing III (QE3), or an equivalent program, is growing.
Gold, silver and related mining shares will rally heading into late 2012 and
are likely to break out dramatically as current trends develop.
|
|